I’m not hip to cyberstalking laws but amorali might at least do some preliminary research. Assuming the OP is in the US, anyway.
The behaviour described in the OP seems very skeevy, not right and probably illegal. Certainly the sort of thing that ought not to be legal in civilized society.
Thank you everyone. I have asked other people and had some people who were in the “let it go” camp.
Among other things knowing someone is still that focused and interested in you and your life is very unnerving. I was hoping someone would come up with a miracle answer for that. Oh well
I had a bitch of a divorce, with further legal hurdles afterwards (which I won!!). In the OP’s situation I’d get a friend to do something while I was vacationing in the Caribbean. But that’s just me and I know it’s wrong.
I tend to fall into the “let it be” camp most of the time. I have a limited amount of energy to expend, and I’m not interested in chasing after hostilities.
However.
The behavior you’re describing has the potential to seriously damage your ability to earn a living as well as your public reputation, and the downside to ignoring it is too great. You need to contact a lawyer and the relevant law enforcement. Start with a restraining order. Also, start taking your online security far more seriously, especially passwords. Create new email accounts your ex knows nothing about, change your passwords once a week, and use passwords your ex can’t guess at (no family/pet names, important dates, or in jokes).
You’re the only one who can really protect yourself in a situation like this, and it’s very tempting to brandish your fist and yell about the unfairness of the Internet, but that is a pointless activity.
I’d definitely go to a lawyer and find out my legal options.
The real question I’d be asking myself is whether ignoring this will inspire escalation–since if someone’s goal is to be noticed, they may well keep upping the ante until they are–or whether taking action, like reporting to police, will inspire efforts at vengeance. Which sounds more likely in this guy’s case?
These are not mutually exclusive answers. Throwing an egg at your car is illegal, but given the nature of the relationship, the children involved, it may not be worth pulling out every legal weapon in your arsenal to fight back.
The extent of this particular string of incidents seems to be significant enough to at least warrant a call to a lawyer.
When kids are involved it is important to take the high road, especially if you are a man.
If that sometimes means letting childish behavior slide, and not responding to every jab or malicious act of your spouse, then, so be it.
Anytime the authorities are involved in domestic disputes, the man will be looked at as instigator, unless there is overwhelming evidence against the female.
Besides, the first few years of a divorce are the worst, that crap tends to calm down eventually.
Not stoking the fire is key to letting the bad feelings die down. Unfortunately, that means you are going to feel like you are taking a bunch of shit, and you will be.
My ex-wife does shit like this. At least she did. As far as I know she still tries. I’ve changed my phone numbers twice. I’ve changed every password I can think of, as well as my handle on any message board I join. I’ve also stopped going to message boards she knows I used to frequent.
We haven’t been an item in over a decade, and she wasted no time getting remarried, but just last year (or the year before), “someone” repeatedly attempted to access a message board account of mine (where I didn’t change my handle from my real name). The only reason I know is because the system was set up to generate an email after the fifth failed attempt. I was like, Jesus Christ! I thought you were done with this!
Unfortunately, they seem to know enough about you to cause these problems, so it may be prudent to find out a bit so they don’t continue to have the upper hand.
I know it’s unfair that you should have to, but counting on the police or authorities to end this kind of thing is often not enough.
Isn’t hacking like this wire fraud? I think that’s a Federal offense. Not to mention the Libel. Contact an attorney, your local police, and even the FBI.
I haven’t been divorced, but to my understanding, at least in my state, there’s a legal document called a SAPCR (suit affecting parent child relationship) that controls things like child support and custody. I’d document everything that could be documented, go to a lawyer and ask about getting a restraining order. I’d also ask about petitioning the court to change the custody arrangements so my child could spend more time with me, and less time with my crazy ex.
There’s no harm in filing a police report. If it ever comes up, you can say you did it. And maybe you can even get a copy, for the family court.
I wouldn’t count on the police doing anything about it, though, and even if they do, it won’t necessarily be of any great help to you. All they can do is put her in jail for a day or two.
The key thing to remember is that once you’ve talked to the police about it, it’s up to them (and later, the prosecutor) to decide what to do about it. It’s not up to you.